Support for Malpractice Lawsuits from Forbes?

Are you kidding me? Forbes? I just assumed everyone who has ever picked up Forbes though every malpractice lawsuit was frivolous. I never thought I would live to see the day:

Decisions about the tasks physicians take on are best made with information about the magnitude of the underlying risk to patients. In the surplus lines market, malpractice insurance underwriters convey this information to physicians through their brokers in the form of pricing options for insurance. One option may include surgical coverage while another option, with a lower premium, would not cover surgery. This creates the appropriate incentive for physicians to consider the risk associated with their practice patterns.

All of this protects consumers. The potential for surcharges or cancellation of policies offered by admitted carriers and the higher cost of obtaining insurance in the surplus lines market create an incentive for physicians to practice care that meets medical community standards.

Rarely, in the very worst cases, physicians will be denied coverage in the surplus lines market. It may be because the physician is such a danger to the public that there is no viable restriction that would permit the physician to continue in practice. Even when a state medical board fails to sanction a physician who should not be practicing medicine, denial of malpractice insurance precludes affiliations with most hospitals and other provider organizations, protecting consumers served by those providers. In the seven states where medical malpractice is mandated for practice, all consumers benefit from these protections.